Lone Star Airlines

Lone Star Airlines
IATA ICAO Callsign
AD LSS LONESTAR
Founded 1984
Ceased operations 1998
Hubs Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport

Lone Star Airlines was an American regional airline, now defunct, that operated both domestic and international flights. For much of the airline's life its headquarters were located in the Fort Worth Stockyards in Fort Worth, Texas.[1] The airline's largest hub was located at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport.[2] The airline filed for bankruptcy in August, 1998 and was liquidated in October, 1998.

History

Aspen Mountain Air Dornier 328

Lone Star was founded in 1984 in Stillwater, Oklahoma as Exec Express Inc. by Philip Trenary (later President of Pinnacle Airlines),[3] the company moved its headquarters to Fort Worth, Texas in 1987.[4][5] Exec Express Inc. operating as Exec Express Commuter Airlines[6] later became Exec Express II Inc. and eventually operated under the d/b/a's of Lone Star Airlines and Aspen Mountain Air.[7] In order to have both names on the same ticket stock a third d/b/a was created "Aspen Mountain Air/Lone Star Airlines"[8] The airline became an American Airlines (AMR Corporation) and Frontier Airlines code sharing partner. In 1996 Professional Pilot magazine selected Lone Star Airlines to receive the Regional Airline Teamwork Award.[9] By 1997 the airline was serving 21 cities in 8 states Arkansas, Colorado, Florida, Missouri, Montana, New Mexico, Tennessee, and Texas. International non-stop service to Mexico was provided from DFW International Airport.[10] Federal EAS subsidies approximated 20% of total revenues in 1996. Total revenues were projected to exceed $24 million in 1997.[11]

Hubs and destinations

Dallas/Fort Worth

EL Paso

St. Louis

Denver

Fort Worth

FEDERAL ESSENTIAL AIR SERVICE COMMUNITIES, (EAS)[12]

Aircraft

Model of a Dornier 328 in Lone Star colors.

Training

Following the introduction of Metro III aircraft, Lone Star Airlines incorporated state of the art, full motion aircraft flight simulators into its training program.

Lone Star Airlines and Flight Safety International ("FlightSafety") pioneered a new pilot hiring practice. Pilot applicants who met Lone Star Airlines initial hiring requirements, were first interviewed, screened and tested by FlightSafety. Upon review of these results, Lone Star Airlines would select pilots for company interviews and subsequent job offers contingent upon the pilot's successful completion of flight training at one of FlightSafety's flight simulator training centers.[11]

Operating Authority

Besides domestic scheduled passenger service, Lone Star Airlines was granted authority to operate passenger service to the following additional areas:[16]

History

Misc

IATA Airline Code: AD

ICAO Airline Code: LSS

DOT Certificate ID: EQGA

Call Sign: Hustler, Lone Star (when it began using the DBA Lone Star)

See also

References

  1. World Airline Directory. Flight International. March 23–29, 1994. 102. "Head Office: 131 East Exchange Avenue, Suite #222, Ft Worth, Texas 76106, USA."
  2. World Airline Directory. Flight International. March 22–28, 1995. 76.
  3. Reuters - Pinnacle Airlines; http://www.reuters.com/finance/stocks/officerProfile?symbol=PNCL.O&officerId=334544
  4. Fort Worth Stockyards. Livestock Exchange Building - http://www.texas-on-line.com/graphic/stkyrds.htm
  5. World Airline Directory. Flight International. March 25–31, 1998. 80.
  6. Timetableimages.com
  7. Air Carriers of the US; http://www.airlinedata.com/us-e.htm
  8. DOT Order 97-9-31, Sep 30, 1997
  9. Professional Pilot, May 1996; Regional Airline Teamwork Award
  10. 1 2 Dallas Business Journal, Feb 03, 1995; http://www.accessmylibrary.com/article-1G1-16928011/lone-star-adds-new.html
  11. 1 2 Lone Star Airlines Informational Memorandum, prepared by SH&E, October 22, 1996
  12. DOT Order 92-11-33, Docket 47909; Nov 23, 1992
  13. Aerofiles.com, image; http://www.aerofiles.com/swear-metro23.jpg
  14. Aviation Database. http://www.aviationdb.com/index.shtm
  15. 1 2 Flight International, Jan 24, 1996, APALS. http://www.flightglobal.com/articles/1996/01/24/19276/lone-star-launches-apals-map-based-landing-system.html
  16. Exec Express II d/b/a Lone Star Airlines FAA Operating Specifications.
  17. Meacham International Airport - History. http://www.fortworthgov.org/aviation/info/default.aspx?id=7444
  18. "Global Commerce", Summer 1995 - Vol1, No.1; Why did the Peso Collapse?
  19. 1 2 Aspen Times, Mar 14, 2003. Aspen Executive Air. http://www.aspentimes.com/article/20030314/NEWS/303130006
  20. 1 2 3 4 DOT Order 98-11-8, Nov 10, 1998; Docket OST-97-2978, Docket OST-97-3037
  21. USA DOT Order 98-9-16; http://docs.google.com/gview?a=v&q=cache:R93_XyD93h8J:docketsinfo.dot.gov/general/orders/19983qtr/sep98/98916.pdf+Exec+Express+d/b/a+Aspen+Mountain+Air&hl=en&gl=us&sig=AFQjCNGZfxsI2w2xijXJ9iKzXjxMEfaffQ
  22. Lone Star Airlines
  23. Lone Star - Martin 404 aircraft; http://www2.photovault.com/Link/Technology/Aviation/FlightCommercial/Airlines/LoneStarAirlines.html ;also, http://www.the3dstudio.com/product_details.aspx?id_product=32602
  24. M7 Aerospace Acquires Fairchild-Dornier;
  25. Morris James LLP; http://web.archive.org/web/20071226134444/http://bankruptcy.morrisjames.com/2007/09/articles/news/aspen-executive-air-llc-files-chapter-11-case-in-delaware/

External links

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